Subject: Building A DNS IPv6 Linux Server.pdf Thu Oct 16, 2014 12:04 am
Building A DNS IPv6 Linux Server.pdf > tinyurl.com/mlsqhtb
forwarder 150.199.1.10 forwarder 150.199.8.1 ; you can have multiple prefixes or even no prefixes at all ; totd uses them in round-robin fashion prefix 2001:468:181:f1ff:: ; the port totd listens on for incoming requests port 53 . After this is complete you should be able to open a console on one of your hosts on the IPv6 network and ping the router by typing:.
oaklipalla
Posts : 126 Join date : 2014-02-12
Subject: Building A DNS IPv6 Linux Server.pdf Thu Oct 16, 2014 12:08 am
Building A DNS IPv6 Linux Server.pdf
bb8d28022b If not, configure eth1 on the router and your host interface with an IPv4 address and try pinging over IPv4. The rest of the options aren't important for the basic setup scenario described here. Both SIP and XMPP use SRV records in the domain zone to provide both failover and load balancing. Not all TLDs support IPv6 yet. I'm going to use the first available subnet to create my internal IPv6 network (2001:468:181:f100::/64) and use the first available IP from that network for my interface IP (2001:468:181:f100::1/64).
This feature is nice when used during testing, but a bad idea when used with a release version, as older software sometimes generates new warnings with newer, more strict compilers. I have a public IPv4 address on eth0 198.209.98.4, and the IP address of my tunnel endpoint is x.y.z.v (put whatever you want here - I'm just concerned about the privacy of my tunnel provider . If you have multiple NAT-PT machines you can load balance traffic between them by creating multiple "prefix addr" lines, each corresponding to the NAT-PT prefix set for a different NAT-PT machines. In order to start with IPv6, its very common that you add IPv6 to your existing infrastructure. sip.tcp.example.com. If your router is configured to perform IPv6 forwarding (if net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding=1, as it should be if you have global IPv6 reachability) you must drop all packets going to the NAT-PT prefix (default: 2000:ffff: to prevent them from going out to the global cloud. After this is complete you should be able to open a console on one of your hosts on the IPv6 network and ping the router by typing:.